delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a claim in respect of land which, or an interest in which, is alleged to have been taken by the United States Government. Similar claims in respect of the same land based upon earlier acts of the Government have been made before and have been denied.
Peabody
v.
United States,
The present case was decided upon demurrer. The question therefore is hot what inferences should be drawn from the facts that may be proved but whether the allega
*329
tions if proved would require or at least warrant a different finding from those previously reached. There is no doubt that a serious loss has been inflicted upon the'claimant, as the public has been frightened off the premises by the imminence of the guns; and while it is decided that that and the previously existing elements of actual harm do not create a cause of action, it was assumed in the first decision that
“
if the Government had installed its battery, not simply as a means of defense in war, but' with the purpose and effect of subordinating the strip of land between the battery and the sea to the right and privilege' of the Government to fire projectiles directly across it for the purpose of practice or otherwise, whenever it saw fit, in time of peace, with 'the result of depriving the owner of its profitable use, the imposition of such a servitude would constitute an appropriation of property for which compensation should be made.”
It is alleged that after dismounting the old guns for the purpose of sending them to France during the late war, the United States has set up heavy coast defense guns with the intention of firing them over the claimants’ land and without the intent or ability to fire them except over that land. It also, according to the petition, has established upon that land a fire control station and service, and in December, 1920, it again discharged all of the-guns over and across the same land. The last fact, although occurring after this petition was filed, may be considered as bearing on the intent in establishing the fire control. If the United States, with the admitted intent to fire across the claimants’ land at will should fire a single shot or put a fire control upon the land, it well might be that the taking of a right would be complete. But even when the intent thus to make use of the claimants’ property is not admitted, while a single act may not be enough, a continuance of them in sufficient number and for a sufficient *330 time may prove it. Every successive trespass adds to the force of the evidence. The establishment of a fire control is- an indication of an abiding purpose. The fact that the evidence was not sufficient in 1905 does not show that it may not be sufficient in 1922. As we have said the intent and the overt acts are alleged as is also the conclusion that the United States has taken the land. That we take to be stated as a conclusion of fact and not of law, and as intended to allege the actual import of the foregoing acts. In our opinion the specific facts set forth would warrant a finding that a servitude has been imposed.'
It, very well may be that the claimants will be unable to establish authority on thé part of those who did the acts to bind the Government by taking the land, United States v. North American Transportation & Trading Co., 253 . U. S. 330. But as the allegation is that the United States did the acts in question; we are not prepared to pronounce it impossible upon demurrer. As the United States built the fort and put in the guns and the men, there is a little natural unwillingness to find lack of authority to do the acts even if the possible legal consequences were unforeseen. If the acts amounted to a taking, without assertion of an adverse right, a contract would be implied whether it was thought of or not. The repetition of those acts through many years and the establishment of the fire control may be found to show an abiding purpose to fire when the 'United States sees fit, even if not frequently, or they may be explained as still only occasional torts. That is for the Court of Claims when the evidence is heard.
Judgment reversed.
I’ agree that, in time of peace, the United States has not the unlimited right to shoot from a battery over adjoining
*331
private property, even if no physical damage is done to it thereby; that a single shot so fired may, in connection with other conceivable facts, justify a court in finding that the Government took, by eminent domain, the land or an easement therein; and that such taking, if made under circumstances which give rise to a contract implied in fact to pay compensation, will entitle the owner to sue in the Court of Claims. But the question here is not whether the facts set forth in the petition would alone, or in connection with other evidence, justify the court in finding such a taking and the implied contract. The case was heard on demurrer to the petition; the facts therein set forth must, therefore, be taken as the ultimate facts; and they must be treated as are the findings of fact made by the Court of Claims. These are treated like a special verdict and not as evidence from which inferences may be drawn. Rule I of this Court relating to appeals from the Court of Claims;
Crocker
v.
United States,
Appropriation by the United States of private property for public use, without instituting condemnation .proceedings, does not entitle the owner to sue under the Tucker Act (Judicial Code, § 24, par. 20), unless the talcing was made under such circumstances as to give rise to a contract express or implied in fact to pay compensation.
Hill v. United States,
The petition sets forth the proceedings in the two earlier cases,
Peabody
v.
United States,
This suit was begun in February, 1920. The original petition set forth the facts found in the earlier cases; and
*335
substantially nothing more except the intention to reinstall the guns. It was devoted largely to pointing out errors in the- earlier findings for which it sought relief through the equity powers of the court. The only new fact then alleged, which may be deemed material, was “ establishing [on claimants’ land] a fire control station and service for use of the fort.” The reinstallation of guns, and the firing in December, 1920, were first set up by an amendment filed in 1921. And it is by this rein-stallation after the commencement of this suit, that the United States is alleged to have established the fort as a part of the permanent coast defense.
1
If there was no taking until the guns were installed and the shots fired in December, 1920, then there was no cause of action when this suit was brought; and the demurrer was properly sustained on that ground. See
Court of Marion County
v.
United States,
53 Ct. Clms. 120, 150. And there is this further obstacle to the maintenance of the suit. We take judicial notice of the fact that on December 8, 1920, the United States was still at war with Germany and Austria-Hungary. Joint Resolution of March 3, 1921, c. 136, 41 Stat. 1359. That the Government has in time of war the right to shoot-over private land was assumed in
Peabody
*336
v.
United States, supra,
and is not disputed. See also,
Peabody
v.
United States,
43 Ct. Clms. 5, 18. The Armistice signed November 11, 1918, left the United States possessed iii December, 1920, of the same power to fire over claimants’ land as if war had then been flagrant.
Hamilton
v.
Kentucky Distilleries & Warehouse Co.,
It is said that the petition ■ alleges, in general terms, a taking and intention to take by the United States; that this allegation alone, although general, is an allegation of all the facts necessary to give a cause of action; and that the specification in detail of the facts relied upon may be treated as surplusage. To this contention there are several answers. The practice of the Court of Claims, while liberal, does not allow a general statement of claim in analogy to the common counts. It requires a plain concise statement of the facts relied upon.- See Rule 15, Court of Claims. The petition may not be so general as to leave the defendant in doubt as to what must be met.
Schierling
v.
United States,
23 Ct. Clms. 361;
Atlantic Works
v.
United States,
46 Ct. Clms. 57, 61;
New Jersey Foundry & Machine Co.
v.
United States,
49 Ct. Clms. 235;
United States
v.
Stratton,
The petition alleges in terms authority in the Secretary of War to take the land. But in setting forth the facts relied upon, the pleader has disclosed the absence of authority from the Secretary of War to the officers by whom the taking, if any, must have been made. Claimants seek in their suit to recover $820,000. They assert that the land is worth $700,000. For the fifteen years preceding the commencement of this suit, there had been active litigation in which claimants had strenuously asserted that there was a taking and the United States had throughout denied that it had taken, or intended to take, any property of claimants. Unless the Secretary of War conferred upon his subordinates who made this alleged taking authority to take this land or an easement therein, the Government can, in no event, be made liable.
United States
v.
North American Transportation
&
Trading Co.,
*338
The principle on which, under certain conditions, compensation may be recovered in the Court pf Claims for private property appropriated for public purposes without condemnation proceedings, leaves unimpaired the long established rules that the United States is not. liable for its torts, nor for unauthorized acts of its officers and agents, although performed in the ordinary course of their business and for the benefit of the United States. The Tucker Act merely gives a remedy where the essential elements of contractual liability exist. It does not give a right of action against the United States in those cases where, if the transaction were between private parties, recovery could be had upon a contract implied in law, as in ease of unjust enrichment,
Sutton
v.
United States,
Notes
The facts concerning the establishment and earlier use of the battery found in the first suit, were:
By Act of February 21, 1873, c. 175, 17 Stat. 468, 469, Congress appropriated $50,000 for batteries in Portsmouth Harbor, on Gerrish Island and Jerry Point, and by Act of February 10, 1875, c. 39, 18 *334 Stat. 313, added to the appropriation for the Gerrish Island battery, $20,000. Under the authority thus conferred a tract of 70 acres abutting claimants’ land was purchased in 1873, and construction was begun. After $50,000 had been expended in substantially completing the breast-high walls of the fortification, the work was suspended for lack of appropriations in 1876; and it was not resumed-until funds were allotted out of the general appropriation made by the Act of May 7, 1898, c. 248, 30 Stat. 400, for fortifications and like purposes. Then, on the site of the old, uncompleted battery, there was constructed the battery now known as Fort Foster; and in December, 1901, it was transferred to the Artillery. In June, 1902, the Government fired two of the guns, and in September, 1902, another, for the purpose of testing guns and carriages, off the coast; and in so doing it fired across complainants’ land. Between that time and 1911 no gun was fired from the fort. This battery is located within 200 feet of a corner of claimants’ land; no part.of the fort encroaches upon it; but the guns there installed had a range of fire over all its sea front; and whether the guns then installed could have been fired for -practice or other necessary purpose in time of peace without shooting over claimants’ land depends upon a question of law concerning ownership of a narrow strip of land over which the guns had a range of fire — a question as to whieli the parties were and so far as appears are still in dispute. It was not, so far as then appeared, the intention of the Government to fire in time of pea-e any gun already installed or which might thereafter be installed, over and across’the claimants’ land, so as to deprive them of the use of the same or to injure them, except as such intention can be drawn from the fact that the guns then installed were so fixed as to make it possible so to do and the fact that they had been fired as stated. On these facts found by the Court of Claims, 46 Ct. Clms. 39, that court and this held, that there was no basis for the claim that the Government had appropriated the land and impliedly agreed to pay for it. Peabody v. United States,231 U. S. 530 .
The amendment alleges
“And in so doing the United States have established the said fort and battery with the said guns as a part of the permanent establishment of the coast defense fortifications maintained by [it] . . . without intending to fire, or being able to fire, the said guns to sea except over and across the. said land. And the United States have used the said land of the said claimants for the establishment of. a fire control station and service for the use of said fort. The United States have since setting up the said guns, as aforesaid, at frequent intervals in the use of the said fort, raised ”'e said guns and pointed them as aforesaid over and across the said land, and have, further, in the use of the said fort, discharged all of the said guns as aforesaid, on or about the eighth day of December, 1920, over and across the said land.”
